“But Jesus told them, “I will be with you only a little longer. Then I will return to the one who sent me. You will search for me but not find me. And you cannot go where I am going.” The Jewish leaders were puzzled by this statement. “Where is he planning to go?” they asked. “Is he thinking of leaving the country and going to the Jews in other lands? Maybe he will even teach the Greeks! What does he mean when he says, ‘You will search for me but not find me,’ and ‘You cannot go where I am going’?””
John 7:33-36 NLT
The Jewish leaders were perplexed because of the two statements made by Jesus. In their attempt to arrest Him, they were stopped in their tracks. “You will search for me but not find me” had just been said by a man who claimed to be the Son of God. If His claim about Himself was correct, they reasoned, why will He disappear and go somewhere they can’t? They rationalised their dilemma by suggesting that Jesus might be planning to leave Jerusalem and going to another land where the Jews or even a people they despised, such as the Greeks, lived. But then perhaps a niggly thought started to build in their minds. The prophet Jeremiah had written, “And you will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart” (Jeremiah 29:13). If Jesus was in fact divine, as He claimed, then they would be able to search for Him and find Him. But if they refuted His claim then they were in danger of missing out on the promise penned by the prophet.
Once again, Jesus was speaking about spiritual matters. Those who rejected Him and His teaching about the Kingdom of God had chosen a path that would fail to lead to eternal life with God. They would instead experience God’s judgement and an uncertain future beyond the grave. It took the Jewish people of His time much courage to be able to believe in Jesus, because His radical teaching, though building on much of the Jewish traditional theology, took a different course and re-established the importance of gaining a relationship with God. Such a message had always been there in the Hebrew Bible but had become eclipsed by a form of religion that majored on following rules and regulations rather than the One who brought them in the first place. In the same way it took much arrogance from the Jewish leaders to reject Jesus and His teaching, instead stating that Jesus was a fraud and should be killed to avoid Him polluting the people with a teaching that they did not approve of.
So, Jesus quite rightly told the Jewish leaders that He was going somewhere – in fact, as we know, returning to His Heavenly home – a place that would not be available to the Jewish leaders because they had rejected the Messenger, the Son of God, sent by the very God they claimed to worship. There is no place in Heaven for anyone who has rejected Jesus. But we fast forward to 21st Century Planet Earth and find the same attitudes still prevalent today. Of course, Jesus does not stand before us in the flesh, but His message is still alive and well. His counter-cultural teachings about the Kingdom of God and the importance of repentance of sins and receiving God’s forgiveness still stand. And the words of Jesus still divide humanity into two camps – those who believe in Him and those who don’t. We pilgrims are assured of our salvation because we have embraced Jesus with all of our hearts, and we try our best to persuade others to make the right choice.
Dear Lord Jesus. Only You have the words of eternal life. Please help us to hear them clearly so that we can share them with others. In Your precious Name we pray. Amen.
